Saudi Arabia Launches Riyadh Air: New National Carrier Defies Regional Turmoil
Saudi Arabia Launches Riyadh Air Despite Regional Turmoil

Saudi Arabia launched its second national carrier, Riyadh Air, on Wednesday after more than a year of delays, defying economic turmoil caused by the Middle East war and stiff competition from established Gulf airlines.

Inaugural Flight Details

A London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner in Riyadh Air's white and lavender livery took off at 2:30 am (2330 GMT Tuesday), marking the start of a flagship project in Saudi Arabia's push to reduce its economic reliance on oil.

Riyadh Air, the country's second state-owned airline after Jeddah-based Saudia, aims to help turn the Saudi capital into a global hub to rival Dubai, the world's busiest for international passengers.

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"We want to bring glamour, we want to bring refinement, we want to bring grace back," Riyadh Air CEO Tony Douglas told AFP.

Delays and Challenges

The launch, originally planned for 2025, was delayed by delivery setbacks from Boeing, which has faced manufacturing and safety issues in recent years. It also followed unprecedented attacks from Iran, which fired thousands of drones and missiles at Gulf targets, including airports, casting the region into sudden economic uncertainty.

However, for Douglas, former CEO of Abu Dhabi's Etihad airline, the inaugural flight is "the culmination of four years' worth of preparation."

"I think Riyadh, as a result of its geography, during this particular point in time, has been less affected" by the attacks, he said, seated in a Riyadh Air Dreamliner cabin at a pre-launch event. "You have the trials and the tribulations, you win some, you lose some, you make progress, you sometimes have setbacks, but you have made it, and this day we've made it," added the CEO.

Vision 2030 and Expansion Plans

Saudi Arabia is building a major new airport in Riyadh with a planned capacity of 120 million passengers a year by 2030, compared to 53 million at the existing King Khalid International Airport. Riyadh Air is owned by the $900 billion Public Investment Fund, the main vehicle for de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's ambitious Vision 2030 economic reforms.

In a statement of intent, the airline ordered 132 Boeing 787 Dreamliners and last June signed for 25 Airbus A350-1000s, with an option for 50 more. "Our ambition is to be able to connect to over 100 international cities over the next five years," Douglas said.

At a ceremony celebrating the first planes' delivery, PIF chief and Riyadh Air chairman Yasir Al-Rumayyan described "a historic moment for the nation" and said the company would create "200,000 direct and indirect jobs."

Market Competition and Advantages

Saudi Arabia is focusing on Vision 2030's more pragmatic ventures as extravagances like NEOM and Riyadh's cuboid skyscraper Mukaab are scaled back or scrapped to save costs. The country, which is hosting the 2030 World Expo and the 2034 football World Cup, and welcomes millions of pilgrims to Mecca each year, aims to triple its annual air traffic to 330 million passengers by 2030.

Some analysts have cast doubt over these ambitions in a regional market saturated with competitors such as Dubai's Emirates, Qatar Airways, and Etihad. Yet Saudi airlines hold a significant advantage: a domestic market of approximately 35 million people, by far the region's largest.

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